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- Title: Short Bio of Altichiero (active 1372-84)
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- Italian painter. He probably came from Zevio near Verona and is sometimes
- Title: Short Bio of Fra Angelico (c. 1400-55)
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- 1500, had something of his restraint and grandeur.
- Title: Short Bio of Hans Baldung
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- his brilliant color, expressive use of distortion, and taste for the gruesome
- Title: Short Bio of Jacopo Bassano (1553-1613)
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- something of the peasant artist, even though the influence of, for example,
- search for novel effects of light, taking on something of the iridescent
- by throwing himself out of a window) and Leandro both acquired some distinction
- Title: Short Bio of Hieronymus Bosch
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- although records exist of a commission in 1504 from Philip the Handsome
- Title: Short Bio of Marie Bracquemond
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- She was something of a recluse, and many of her finest works
- Title: Short Bio of Ford Brown
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- craftsmanship and brilliant coloring, but is somewhat swamped by its social
- Title: Short Bio of Pieter Bruegel (about 1525-69)
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- sometimes called the "peasant Bruegel" from such works as
- Title: Short Bio of Gustave Caillebotte
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- Paris that same year. He participated in later shows and painted some 500
- Title: Short Bio of Alonso Cano (1601-67)
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- sometimes called the Spanish
- (1655) that is sometimes considered his masterpiece.
- Title: Short Bio of Michelangelo Caravaggio (1573-1610)
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- years. At some time between 1588 and 1592, Caravaggio went to Rome and worked
- Title: Short Bio of Antoine Caron
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- He had a penchant for gaudy colors and bizarre architectural forms. Some
- Title: Short Bio of Carracci (1557-1602)
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- but somewhat spiritless version of his brother's lively Classicism.
- Title: Short Bio of Petrus Christus
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- He is first documented at Bruges in 1444, and he is thought by some
- and to have completed some of the works left unfinished by the master at
- figures sometimes rather doll-like and without van Eyck's feeling of
- Title: Short Bio of Clouet
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- in 1541. His work is somewhat better documented than his father's, but
- Title: Short Bio of John Constable (1776-1837)
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- After spending some years working in the picturesque tradition of
- Title: Short Bio of Piero Cosimo
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- inventions, inhabited by fauns, centaurs, and primitive men. There is sometimes
- religious works are somewhat more conventional, although still distinctive,
- Title: Short Bio of Lucas Cranach (1472-1553)
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- (he left in 1504), but in his period there he painted some of his finest
- Title: Short Bio of Cuyp
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- Cuyp had several imitators there, and some of the paintings formerly attributed
- Title: Short Bio of Edward d'Ancona
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- Although he was a prolific pin-up artist who produced hundreds of enjoyable images, almost nothing is known about his background. He sometimes signed his paintings with the name "D'Amarie", but his real name appears on numerous calendar prints published from the mid 1930s through the mid 1950s, and perhaps as late as 1960.
- Title: Short Bio of Gustave Doré (1832-83)
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- In the 1870s he also took up painting (doing some large and ambitions
- Title: Short Bio of Jan Eyck
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- (1432). Hubert van Eyck is thought by some
- Title: Short Bio of Henri Fantin-Latour (1836-1904)
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- (sometimes called Homage to Manet)
- Title: Short Bio of Robert Feke
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- His works are somewhat lacking in characterization, but their strength and
- Title: Short Bio of Master Flémalle (active 1406-44)
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- (Metropolitan Museum, New York), and he is indeed sometimes referred to as
- Title: Short Bio of Lucian Freud
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- sometimes been described as a Realist (or rather absurdly as a
- Title: Short Bio of Caspar Friedrich
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- Some of Friedrich's best-known paintings are expressions of a religious
- Even some of Friedrich's apparently nonsymbolic paintings contain inner
- Title: Short Bio of Henry Fuseli
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- at its best has something of the imaginative intensity of his friend Blake,
- Title: Short Bio of Thomas Gainsborough
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- time consisted mainly of heads and half-length, but he also painted some
- Gainsborough sometimes said that while portraiture was his profession
- drawings, some in pencil, some in charcoal and chalk, and he occasionally
- he is sometimes influenced by Rubens. But he was
- Title: Short Bio of (Jean-Louis-André-) Géricault (1791-1824)
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- somewhat morbid personality.
- Title: Short Bio of Domenico Ghirlandaio
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- and a certain grandeur of conception that sometimes hints at the High Renaissance.
- Raphael and a portrait painter of some distinction.
- Title: Short Bio of El Greco (1541-1614)
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- throughout his life, always in Greek characters, and sometimes followed
- Title: Short Bio of Matthias Grünewald (his real name was Mathis Neithart, otherwise Gothart, 1470/80-1528)
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- 13 of his paintings and some drawings survive. His present worldwide
- Title: Short Bio of Ando Hiroshige (1797-1858)
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- is sometimes of lesser quality, as he appears to have hurriedly met
- at different times. His total output was immense, some 5400 prints in all.
- Title: Short Bio of Meindert Hobbema
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- of Jacob van Ruisdael. Some of his pictures are very like Ruisdael's, but
- Title: Short Bio of Nicolas Largillière (1656-1746)
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- on drawing, while some broke away in favour of the style of
- Title: Short Bio of Kasimir Malevich (1878-1935)
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- should be hung, photographs of early exhibitions sometimes providing
- Title: Short Bio of Andrea Mantegna (1431?-1506)
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- viewer the illusion of looking up from below. The effect is somewhat the same
- For them Mantegna created some of his greatest paintings. In one famous work,
- Title: Short Bio of Franz Marc
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- thirty-six, but not before he had created some of the most exciting
- Title: Short Bio of Henri Matisse (1869-1954)
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- completed some of his most exciting paintings. In 1941 Matisse was
- the beautiful and produced some of the most powerful beauty ever painted.
- in him, though there was much passion. He is an awesomely controlled artist,
- Title: Short Bio of Alphonse Maureau
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- Alphonse Maureau shows some skillfull studies from nature done on small scale.
- Title: Short Bio of Hans Memling (1430?-94)
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- am Main, Germany. Memling, whose name is sometimes spelled Memlinc, first
- Title: Short Bio of Jean-François Millet (1814-75)
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- palette and freer brushstrokes, his work showed some affinities
- Title: Short Bio of Amedeo Modigliani
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- some of his best work. His interest in African masks and sculpture remains
- Title: Short Bio of Earl Moran
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- where also a time of some hardship for Moran following his bitter divorce
- Title: Short Bio of Gustave Moreau (1826-1898)
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- jewel-like. Although he had some success at the Salon, he had no need
- Title: Short Bio of Bartolomé Murillo (1617-82)
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- At some point in his life, probably in the late 1640s, Murillo is believed
- Title: Short Bio of Pierre Patel (1605-1676)
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- with whose paintings his own have sometimes been confused.
- Title: Short Bio of Jackson Pollock (1912-56)
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- some abruptness in 1947. Instead of using the traditional easel he affixed
- or knives (to use his own words), sometimes obtaining a heavy impasto
- the finished work the canvas was sometimes docked or trimmed to suit the
- Title: Short Bio of Auguste Rodin (1840-1917)
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- the basis for some of Rodin's most influential and powerful work. In 1884 he
- Title: Short Bio of Henri Rousseau (1844-1910)
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- (although he sometimes interpreted sarcastic remarks literally and took
- Title: Short Bio of John Sargent (1856-1925)
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- this was unjust, especially in relation to some of his works
- Title: Short Bio of Joshua Shaw
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- work and techniques of some of Britain's leading artists.
- Title: Short Bio of Paul Signac
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- inspired by the bright sunlight of southern France. He also painted some
- Title: Short Bio of Alfred Sisley
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- He spent some time painting in Fontainebleau, at Chailly with Monet,
- some time in London and was introduced to Durand-Ruel by
- Naturally different, he did not promote himself in the way that some
- received something approaching the recognition he deserved.
- Title: Short Bio of James Tissot
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- as successful there as he had been in Paris and lived in some style in
- Title: Short Bio of Joseph Turner (1775-1851)
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- Venice was the inspiration of some of Turner's finest work. Wherever he
- English watercolor landscape painting. Some of his most famous works are
- Title: Short Bio of Jan Vermeer
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- Dutch genre painter who lived and worked in Delft, created some of the most
- Title: Short Bio of Jim Warren
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- Tools: Traditional oil paint on stretched canvas which I coat with a gesso primer. Only paintbrushes are used to paint with and NO airbrush, as people have sometimes thought.
- Art Training: "I'm basically self taught. I learned some basics in my high school art class. At college I attended several life-drawing classes, and always studied the great masters at museums."
- Some of Jim's favorite accomplishments:
- Title: Short Bio of Benjamin West (1738-1820,)
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- figures as somewhat stiff, his colors harsh, and his themes uninspired, but
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